Is the 9/11 memorial museum gift store a tasteless idea?

Attendees and relatives of the fallen have been left horrified after visiting the 9/11 memorial gift store which part of its vernacular is offering a collection of kitsch memorabilia for sale while sitting directly above the remains of up to 8000 body parts.

Token items for sale include toy rescue dogs, baseball caps, glass ornaments of the Twin Towers and even flags, badges and magnets will be available for visitors to purchase. Interestingly according to the store’s website, only a few of the ‘national’ items are actually made in the USA.

While the museum’s website explains how the the proceeds benefit ‘developing and sustaining’ the memorial which is run by executives with privately-funded six-figure salaries others are not necessarily so convinced what’s for sale (let alone selling having a gift store in the first place) is the right thing given the gravity of the incident which led to so many lives being lost on Sept 11, 2001.

Tells one distraught mother, Diane Horning via the nypost who lost her 26 year old son Matthew and whose remains were never found: ‘Here is essentially our tomb of the unknown. To sell baubles I find quite shocking and repugnant,’

Added the mother: ‘I think it’s a money-making venture to support inflated salaries, and they’re willing to do it over my son’s dead body,’

Joe Daniels, the memorial and museum’s CEO, makes a cool $378,000 a year, though his and other executives’ six-figure salaries are funded through private donations.

Still, the idea of a gift shop doesn’t sit well with many close to the tragedy, who believe it could have been kept closed until Wednesday, when the museum opens to the public.

Since President Obama opened the museum this past Thursday, the memorial has since only been open to survivors and victims’ families.

‘These people are suffering, and they don’t need to be reaching into their pockets,’John Feal, a former Ground Zero demolition survivor, told the Post. ‘The museum could have gone six days without asking for money.’

However, Mr Feal, who runs the FealGood Foundation for ailing 9/11 workers, says he understands the museum’s need to sell items in order to cover costs.

The museum plans to operate on a $63million budget with money raised through admission fees and donations.

Tells the museum’s website: ‘All net proceeds from our sales are dedicated to developing and sustaining the national September 11 Memorial & Museum,’

‘Thank you for helping to build a lasting place for remembrance, reflection, and learning for years to come.’